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1. Improving the energy efficiency of our buildings
Local weights and measures guidance for Energy Certificates
and air-conditioning inspections for buildings
www.communities.gov.uk
community, opportunity, prosperity
2.
3. Improving the energy efficiency of our buildings
Local weights and measures guidance for Energy Certificates
and air-conditioning inspections for buildings
The Energy Performance of Buildings
(Certificates and Inspections) (England and Wales)
Regulations 2007 SI 2007/991, amended by
SI 2007/1669, SI 2007/3302, SI 2008/647 and SI 2008/2363
October 2008
Department for Communities and Local Government
5. Foreword 3
Foreword
The requirements of the Energy Performance of Buildings Directive relating to Energy
Performance Certificates (EPCs) and inspection of air-conditioning systems have been
transposed into law in England and Wales, creating new responsibilities for building
owners, sellers, builders and occupiers, and new roles for enforcement agencies in making
sure that these responsibilities are met.
This guidance offers background on the Directive, the legal framework for energy
certificates and air-conditioning inspections, and on the powers and processes for
enforcement by local weights and measures authorities (Trading Standards or other
services).
This guide describes the scope and requirements of the Regulations and provides guidance
on how these should be applied. It is intended for local weights and measures. Though this
guidance aims to explain how the requirements will work in practice, any interpretation of
the Regulations is offered only as a guide, as the Department cannot provide legal advice.
Therefore, it is important to read and understand the Regulations as well. In cases of doubt,
enforcement authorities should obtain their own legal advice.
This guide deals with the Energy Performance of Buildings (Certificates and Inspections)
(England and Wales) Regulations 2007. In situations where homes are marketed for sale,
sellers will also need to comply with the Housing Act 2004 and the Home Information Pack
(No. 2) Regulations 2007 (as amended) with respect to providing home information packs.
Separate guidance for enforcement authorities is available for Home Information Packs.
The Department has provided £3.4m for 2008/09 and £1.8m for 2009/10 to help fund
these new duties. There is no hypothecation of any element of the transfer and local
authorities are free to determine funding of different services taking into account local
needs and priorities.
6. 4 Improving the energy efficiency of our buildings – Local weights and measures guidance for Energy Certificates and air-conditioning inspections for buildings
7. Contents 5
Contents
Section 1 Introduction 8
1.1 What is the European Directive for the Energy Performance of
Buildings (EPBD)? 8
1.2 What this means for England and Wales 8
1.3 What are the requirements 9
1.4 When energy certificates and inspections are required 10
1.5 Who is responsible for ensuring certificates and inspections
are done 11
1.6 Exempt buildings 12
1.7 Policy background 12
Section 2 Production of certificates and reports 13
2.1. The process for EPCs, DECs and air-conditioning inspections 13
2.2. Who is responsible for getting an EPC, DEC or air-conditioning
inspection report? 14
2.3. When must the documents be made available? 15
2.4. What must be made available? 15
2.4.1. Domestic EPC 16
2.4.2. Non-domestic EPC 17
2.4.3. Display Energy Certificates 18
2.4.4. Providing information at auctions 18
2.4.5. Written particulars (for sales of homes only) 19
2.4.6. Energy information for off-plan marketed sales
(for sales of homes only) 20
2.4.7. Non-marketed sales of homes 21
2.5. Validity of documents 22
8. 6 Improving the energy efficiency of our buildings – Local weights and measures guidance for Energy Certificates and air-conditioning inspections for buildings
Section 3 Enforcement of the regulations 23
3.1. Summary of enforcement provisions 23
3.2. Power to require documents 24
3.3. Penalty charge notices 24
3.4. Defences 25
3.5. Reviews 26
3.6. Appeals 26
3.7. Offences relating to enforcement officers 26
3.8. Enforcement Checklist 27
Section 4 The EPC Register 28
4.1. Role of Accreditation Schemes 28
4.2. Access to the Register 28
4.3. Access to the register for enforcement authorities 29
Glossary of terms 30
9. Energy Performance Certificates Enforcement – key facts 7
Energy Performance Certificates
Enforcement – key facts
• Sellers, landlords and builders respectively are responsible for providing energy
performance certificates (EPCs) on their properties when these are sold, rented and
constructed
• Occupiers of larger public buildings (such as hospitals or government offices) are
responsible for showing a display energy certificate (DEC) in a prominent place
• Local weights and measures authorities or, for EPCs on construction only, local building
control officers or approved inspectors are responsible for ensuring that these people
provide or show valid EPCs or DECs
• Local weights and measures authorities are also responsible for ensuring that owners
of air-conditioning systems (over 12kW) are in possession of an inspection report.
Systems will have to be inspected at least once every five years
• Enforcement agencies have new powers to investigate, require the production of EPCs
and DECs and serve penalty notices for failure to comply with duties in respect of EPCs,
DECs or air-conditioning inspection reports for buildings
• Energy assessor accreditation bodies will handle other aspects of regulation, including
ensuring that assessors work to appropriate standards, checking the quality and
accuracy of certificates, and handling complaints against assessors for unacceptable
work or behaviour.
10. 8 Improving the energy efficiency of our buildings – Local weights and measures guidance for Energy Certificates and air-conditioning inspections for buildings
Section 1
Introduction
1.1 What is the European Directive on the Energy
Performance of Buildings (EPBD)?
Directive 2002/91/EC on the energy performance of buildings came into force on 4 January
2003, and the provisions which relate to EPCs, DECs and air-conditioning inspection
reports must be transposed no later than 4 January 2009. The aim of the directive is to
promote improvements to the energy performance of buildings. By encouraging owners
and tenants to choose energy efficient buildings and to improve the energy performance
of those buildings once they occupy them, energy consumption and carbon emissions will
be reduced.
The Directive promotes the improvement of energy performance of buildings in four areas:
• Providing methods to calculate the energy performance of buildings
• Setting of minimum standards in new and existing buildings
• Energy certification of buildings
• Inspection and assessment of heating and cooling installations.
1.2 What this means for England and Wales
Legislation was passed in 2006 to update the Building Regulations 2000 to ensure all new
buildings would meet higher standards of energy efficiency. This covered the first two
requirements of the Directive: providing methods to calculate the energy performance of
buildings and the setting of energy performance standards for new buildings and larger
buildings when refurbished. This is reflected in Part L of the Building Regulations which is
enforced by building control.
The Energy Performance of Buildings (Certificates and Inspections)(England and Wales)
Regulations 2007 (‘the Regulations’) have come into force on a phased basis, from 1
August 2007 to 1 October 2008, and cover the remaining two requirements: energy
certification of buildings and inspection and assessment of air-conditioning installations.
11. Section 1 Introduction 9
1.3 What are the requirements
An energy performance certificate (EPC) is required when a building, which definition
includes a part of a building which has been designed or altered to be used separately, is
constructed, sold and let:
• for non-dwellings, this requirement started for buildings with a total useful floor
area (TUFA) of more than 10,000m2 from 6 April 2008, more than 2,500m2 from
1 July 2008 and for all other non-dwellings from 1 October 2008
• this is a current requirement for all marketed sales of homes requiring a home
information pack (HIP). For any other home sales, this requirement starts from 1
October 2008
• this requirement started from 6 April 2008 for homes at the end of construction
• this requirement starts from 1 October 2008 for homes when rented.
A display energy certificate (DEC) must be displayed by occupiers of public buildings:
• where the TUFA of the building is greater than 1000m2; and
• the building is occupied by a public authority or an institution providing public
services to a large number of persons; and
• the public visit the building.
An air-conditioning inspection is required if the effective rated output of systems within a
building is more than 12kW:
• if the system has an effective rated output of 250kW or more, the first inspection
must be carried out by 4 January 2009
• if the system has an effective rated output of 12kW or more, the first inspection
must be carried out by 4 January 2011.
Air-conditioning systems must be inspected at intervals not exceeding five years.
Transitional provisions apply in relation to EPC requirements for non-dwellings and in
relation to HIP requirements for marketed sales of homes, though the latter do not affect
the requirements for an EPC. The prevailing provisions should be checked before any
penalty notices are issued. If contracts have been exchanged before the coming-into-force
date for an EPC in relation to the category of building in question, then no EPC will be
required. Details of the transitional arrangements can be found in Appendix A.
12. 10 Improving the energy efficiency of our buildings – Local weights and measures guidance for Energy Certificates and air-conditioning inspections for buildings
1.4 When energy certificates and inspections are required
The timetable for the introduction of energy certificates and inspections is phased and is
shown below:
13. Section 1 Introduction 11
1.5 Who is responsible for ensuring certificates and
inspections are done
Regulation Area of responsibility Relevant person
5(2) and 5(5) The EPC is made available to prospective The seller or landlord
buyers and tenants, and given to eventual
buyers and tenants.
6(2) Written particulars on dwelling sales The person providing the
covered by HIPs requirements include the particulars (ie this may be a
asset rating of the building or the whole seller or an estate agent)
EPC.
9(2) EPCs are given to the owners of newly The builder
constructed Crown or statutory
undertakers’ buildings.
10 EPCs must be accompanied by The relevant person for the
recommendation reports EPC on sale or rent, that is
the seller or landlord or the
builder under reg. 9(2)
16(2) Public buildings to display DECs and have The building occupier
advisory reports
21(1), 23 and Certain air-conditioning systems must The system controller,
24 have inspections at least every five years, usually the owner
and keep a copy of the inspection report. A
person taking over the system must ensure
that it is inspected within three months
if no inspection report is given when
responsibility changes.
39(4) A valid EPC, recommendation report, The seller or landlord,
advisory report or air-conditioning building occupier,
inspection report must be produced when or system controller
required by an enforcement authority respectively
within seven days.
14. 12 Improving the energy efficiency of our buildings – Local weights and measures guidance for Energy Certificates and air-conditioning inspections for buildings
1.6 Exempt buildings
The following buildings do not need EPCs:
• buildings used primarily or solely as places of worship
• temporary buildings with a planned time of use of two years or less, and
industrial sites, workshops and non-residential agricultural buildings with low
energy demand
• stand alone buildings with a total floor area of less than 50m2 which are not
dwellings.
Historic and listed buildings are not exempt. Crown and statutory undertakers’ buildings
are also included in the requirements.
1.7 Policy background
The Energy Performance of Buildings (Certificates and Inspections) (England and Wales)
Regulations 2007 (S.I. 2007/991 as amended):
• these regulations implement (in England and Wales) parts of Directive
2002/91/EC on the energy performance of buildings. The Directive lays down
requirements for the energy performance certificates when buildings are
constructed, sold or rented out
• the Regulations are available from the Office of Public Sector Information
website. They are also available from the Communities and Local Government
website together with guidance (see www.communities.gov.uk/epbd).
15. Section 2 Production of certificates and reports 13
Section 2
Production of certificates and reports
Energy certificates rate the energy performance of a building on a scale from A to G. Three
types of energy certificate are required in different circumstances:
• energy Performance Certificates (EPCs) for domestic buildings when they are
constructed, sold or rented out
• energy Performance Certificates (EPCs) for non-domestic buildings when they
are constructed, sold or rented out; and
• display Energy Certificates (DECs) for large, public buildings occupied by public
authorities or institutions providing a public service to a large number of persons
and in either case visited by the public, which need to be displayed at all times.
An air-conditioning inspection report must include an assessment of the air-conditioning
efficiency and the sizing of the system compared to the cooling requirements of the
building and contain appropriate advice on possible improvements to the system,
replacement of the system and alternative solutions.
2.1 The process for EPCs, DECs and air-conditioning
inspections
This section looks at the process for getting an EPC for a building, and the duties involved.
The same requirements apply in law under the EPC regulations regardless of whether it is
a dwelling or a non-domestic building. However, the Home Information Pack Regulations
also apply to dwellings that are marketed for sale and in these cases the EPC will be the first
document in the HIP.
Separate guidance on the HIP requirements has been produced by Communities and Local
Government, and is available from www.homeinformationpacks.gov.uk.
16. 14 Improving the energy efficiency of our buildings – Local weights and measures guidance for Energy Certificates and air-conditioning inspections for buildings
2.2 Who is responsible for getting an EPC, DEC or air-
conditioning inspection report?
The Regulations 2 (1) state that the ‘relevant person’ is responsible for providing an EPC,
DEC or air-conditioning inspection report. Under regulation 16, it is ‘the occupier’ who has
duties in relation to display energy certificates. The following persons are responsible in the
circumstances described:
• as soon as a building is in the process of being offered for sale, it is the
responsibility of the seller to make available an EPC and recommendation report,
free of charge, to prospective buyers
• as soon as a building is in the process of being offered to let, it is the responsibility
of the prospective landlord to make available an EPC and recommendation
report to prospective tenants
• when a building being constructed is physically complete, it is the responsibility
of the person carrying out the construction to give an EPC and recommendation
report to the building owner and to notify Building Control that this has been
done
• for air-conditioning systems, the person who controls the operation of the
system is the person who has the responsibility for ensuring an inspection takes
place. The person who controls the operation of the system is the person who
controls the technical functioning of the system, not someone who can just alter
the temperature
• for buildings with a TUFA of 1000m2 or above that are occupied by public
authorities or by institutions providing public services to a large number of
persons, and visited by the public, it is the responsibility of the occupier to display
a display energy certificate (DEC) at all times in a prominent place clearly visible to
the public and have a valid advisory report in their possession.
For enforcement purposes, it is always the responsibility of the relevant person to make
sure that the EPC is made available in respect of sales or lettings, and provided to the
ultimate buyer or tenant, even if in practice this is done by someone else (eg an estate
agent or managing agent). This is slightly different from the HIPs Regulations, where
the responsibility to provide a pack can be passed to an agent. If the EPC is not provided,
however, this will always come back to the relevant person as a legal responsibility.
To ensure that the same breach is not penalised twice, the same person cannot be subject
to a penalty notice under both the HIP and EPBD Regulations for failing to make available
an energy performance certificate. However, if a HIP does not contain an EPC, both seller
and estate agent can be liable to be given penalty charge notices under the respective legal
provisions.
17. Section 2 Production of certificates and reports 15
2.3 When must the documents be made available?
For all sales and rentals, the EPC must be made available to any prospective buyer or tenant
at the earliest opportunity and in any event before entering into a contract or, if earlier,
when information in writing is first given to such a person who requests information about
the building, or when the building is first viewed by a such a person.
The DEC should be prominently displayed at all times in a prominent place clearly visible to
the public. It is recommended that it is at least A3 in size and displayed in the reception area
of a building.
The most recent air-conditioning report should be kept by the relevant person and given to
any new relevant person.
2.4 What must be made available?
The EPC and the recommendation report must be provided free of charge to prospective
buyers or tenants, and be given to the person who ultimately becomes the buyer or tenant
of the building.
The DEC must be displayed at all times in a prominent place, clearly visible to the public.
The format of EPCs is different for domestic and non-domestic properties. The approved
format for EPCs is:
18. 16 Improving the energy efficiency of our buildings – Local weights and measures guidance for Energy Certificates and air-conditioning inspections for buildings
2.4.1 Domestic EPC
The domestic EPC shows two graphs: the energy efficiency rating (relating to running
costs) and the environmental impact rating (relating to the carbon dioxide emissions rating)
of the property.
19. Section 2 Production of certificates and reports 17
2.4.2 Non-domestic EPC
The non-domestic EPC shows the energy performance of the building as a Carbon Dioxide
(CO2) based index.
EPCs must always be accompanied by a recommendation report that lists cost effective
measures to improve the energy rating of the building and further measures (such as low
and zero carbon generating systems) to achieve the highest standards.
EPCs are produced using standard methods with standard assumptions about energy
usage. This allows prospective buyers or tenants to compare the energy performance of
different buildings.
20. 18 Improving the energy efficiency of our buildings – Local weights and measures guidance for Energy Certificates and air-conditioning inspections for buildings
2.4.3 Display Energy Certificates
A Display Energy Certificate (DEC) provides an Operational Rating for a building. This is
based on the actual energy consumption of the building as recorded by gas, electricity and
other meters and helps the public see the energy efficiency of a building.
A DEC is always accompanied by an advisory report that lists cost effective measures to
improve the energy rating of the building.
2.4.4 Providing information at auctions
In the case of auctions, if the catalogue contains a photograph accompanied by a floor plan
or description of room sizes, or a floor plan and description of room sizes, an asset rating
will also need to be shown. Moreover, the EPC must be available to prospective buyers at
the earliest opportunity. For auctions of domestic property, a HIP must be made available1.
1
Regulation 33 of the HIP regulations provides for transitional arrangements by which homes already on the market when HIP duties
would otherwise commence for them are excepted. Notwithstanding this, independent EPC duties will have commenced for all
buildings on 1st October 2008.
21. Section 2 Production of certificates and reports 19
2.4.5 Written particulars (for sales of homes only)
For marketed sales of homes where written particulars for the property are produced, these
must include either:
• The energy efficiency and environmental impact rating graphs, or
• The EPC (though not the recommendation report) attached to the particulars.
Written particulars are a description of the property given by the seller or on the seller’s
behalf to persons who may be interested in buying the building that includes at least two of
the following:
• a photograph of the building or any room in it
• a floor plan of the building
• a description of the size of the rooms in the building.
This includes agents’ information sheets, auction catalogues, or any other written
information given to such persons, as long as it meets the description above.
Giving ‘written particulars’ includes giving or making available particulars electronically,
such as in an email or as information on a website.
The asset rating graphs from the EPC need not be included in estate agents’ newspaper
adverts or estate agents’ window cards. Where however the window card includes two
or more of the above types of information, it would be good practice to include the asset
rating graphs from the EPC.
Where the written particulars display the two graphs, these must be in the format specified
in the Government’s Notice of Approval of the National Calculation Methodology2. This is
shown below:
2
http://www.communities.gov.uk/index.asp?id=1510426, page 6.
22. 20 Improving the energy efficiency of our buildings – Local weights and measures guidance for Energy Certificates and air-conditioning inspections for buildings
These can be produced in colour or black and white, and as long as the graphs are
legible, there is no size limit. These must however be based on a valid EPC. As long as
they correspond to the ratings in the EPC for the home and the format shown here, and
are included in particulars, the graphs will comply with the requirements. A number of
software providers and property websites are producing the graphs, and there is a template
available on the HIPs website which can also be used to create them.
Except in the case of EPCs (or EPC graphs) attached to written particulars, the EPC must
always be accompanied by the recommendation report.
All the requirements for EPCs can be satisfied by communication via the web or e-mail, if
the recipient consents, as well as by printed material. In the case of information in writing
and written particulars this might include a link to an EPC on a property website, copies
made available to those viewing a property or email attachments. The means of displaying
the graphs on websites will vary, but might include a link to the EPC or graphs on a page
for a particular property. The main principle is that the EPC or graphs should be easily
accessible and obvious to the person looking at the information.
2.4.6 Energy information for off-plan marketed sales
(for sales of homes only)
Where a home is sold before it is physically completed it will need a HIP but it cannot
include a full EPC, which will only be available once construction has been completed.
Instead the HIP will contain a predicted energy assessment (PEA), which will look similar to
the graphs from the full EPC, and will be produced from the design plans for the building.
It will not contain the second column in each graph which shows the potential for savings
if the recommendations report were implemented. The PEA must be replaced by an EPC
when the property is physically complete.
23. Section 2 Production of certificates and reports 21
There is no specified form for the PEA but it is likely that it will be similar to the form
shown below3:
When the building is physically complete, a full EPC will be produced. If it is still on the
market, the EPC will replace the PEA in the HIP. The EPC will have to be given to the ultimate
purchaser under the EPC legislation in any event.
2.4.7 Non-marketed sales of homes
HIPs are intended to help reform the home buying and selling process. Homes that are sold
but not marketed are not subject to HIP duties, nor are sales in certain other circumstances
specified in the HIPs Regulations connected with commercial uses. These transactions will
nonetheless need an EPC from 1 October 20084.
Examples of non marketed sales which require an EPC but not a HIP are:
• Private non-marketed sales (for example, between family members)
• Examples of sales excluded by the HIPs Regulations include:
– Mixed sales, such as a farm, which might consist mainly of agricultural
buildings, but with a farmhouse included
– Portfolio sales, where multiple dwellings (eg a block of flats) are being sold
together and are not available for sale singly.
3
There is a template which can be used to create a PEA of this format at http://www.homeinformationpack.gov.uk/pdf/Predicted_
Energy_Assessment.xls.
4
This will also include home properties subject to the exception in regulation 33 of the HIP regulations.
24. 22 Improving the energy efficiency of our buildings – Local weights and measures guidance for Energy Certificates and air-conditioning inspections for buildings
Homes where all or part of the property has sitting tenants are exempt from the need
from a HIP, but would need an EPC (or EPCs) when sold or rented out from October 2008.
However, a building that is being sold as one property but with a sitting tenant in a sub-
divided part (such as a granny flat) will need a HIP. In these situations there could be two
EPCs in the HIP, because if the granny flat is a separate unit with its own essential facilities
(kitchen and bathroom) the EPC software will consider it a separate dwelling.
For a full list of which sales are exempt from HIPs requirements, see Part 6 of the HIPs
Regulations at : www.opsi.gov.uk/si/si2007/20071667.htm.
2.5 Validity of documents
An EPC is valid for 10 years, except for sales of homes which are subject to the Home
Information Pack Regulations 2007, where a Home Information Pack (HIP) is required.
In these cases an EPC must be no more than three years old when the property is first
marketed. In either case however, if a newer EPC is produced only the latter will be the valid
EPC for the building.
A DEC is valid for a period of 12 months beginning with the nominated5 date. The advisory
report is valid for seven years from issue.
An air-conditioning report is valid for five years.
5
The nominated date is a date no later than three months after the end of the period over which the operational rating is calculated.
The date is nominated by the energy assessor who issued the certificate, most likely in agreement with the building occupier.
25. Section 3 Enforcement of the regulations 23
Section 3
Enforcement of the regulations
Regulations 38 – 48 of The Energy Performance of Buildings (Certifcates and Inspections)
(England and Wales) Regulations 2007 (S.I. 2007/991 as amended by SI 2007/1669, SI
2007/3302, SI 2008/647 and SI 2008/2363) deal with enforcement and outline the powers
and the responsibilities of enforcement authorities and their officers.
3.1 Summary of enforcement provisions
The main features of the enforcement provisions are as follows.
1. It is the duty of every local weights and measures authority to enforce the EPC,
DEC and air-conditioning inspection duties it its area. (regulation 38).
2. They have power to require a person to produce within seven days an EPC and
recommendation report, advisory report or air-conditioning inspection report
for inspection, up to six months from when that person was subject to a duty in
relation to that document. (regulation 39).
3. Where a breach of duties is believed to have taken place, including the duty
under regulation 39 to produce a document for inspection, an enforcement
authority may, if it considers that penalty charge notice ought to be given, give
such a notice to the person who has committed the breach, up to six months
after that breach. The notice must contain specified particulars. It is payable
within 28 days or such longer period specified by the authority. A notice may be
withdrawn by the authority. (regulation 40).
4. The recipient of the notice can, within the time specified for payment, give notice
requiring the enforcing authority to review its decision to give the notice.
5. If the notice is confirmed on review, an appeal may be made to a County Court,
and must be lodged within 28 days of that confirmation or such extended time
as the county court may allow (regulation 45).
6. The penalty charge amount is recoverable as a debt (regulation 46).
7. A person who obstructs, an enforcement officer or who, not being an
enforcement officer, purports to act as one, commits an offence and is liable to a
fine (not exceeding level 5) on conviction. (regulation 48).
26. 24 Improving the energy efficiency of our buildings – Local weights and measures guidance for Energy Certificates and air-conditioning inspections for buildings
Enforcement officers have no powers to check the accuracy of the energy efficiency
information in the EPC, only that it has been issued by an accredited assessor and entered
into the EPC register in relation to the building featured in the transaction and is valid in
respect of time.
3.2 Power to require documents
The Regulations give trading standards officers as authorised officers of the
enforcement authority the power to require a person under a duty to produce an EPC
and recommendation report, advisory report or air-conditioning inspection report for
inspection within seven days of the request. A person is not required to comply with the
request if they have a reasonable excuse for not doing so.
3.3 Penalty charge notices
There is no statutory form for the notice, but it must:
• state the officer’s belief that the person has committed a breach of duty
• state the circumstances of the breach
• require that the person either pay the penalty charge or ask the local authority to
review the notice within the specified period for payment
• tell the recipient that the penalty charge is recoverable as a debt
• specify to whom and at what address the penalty charge may be paid and the
payment method or methods
• specify to whom and at what address a request for a review and any
representations relating to it should be addressed.
The main penalty charges are as follows:
• When selling or renting a home, the penalty is £200 for failing to make available
an EPC or recommendation report to any prospective buyer or tenant or to give
an EPC or recommendation report to the person who ultimately becomes the
buyer or tenant
• The penalty for failing to make an EPC available to any prospective buyer or
tenant when selling or letting non-dwellings is fixed, in most cases, at 12.5 per
cent of the rateable6 value. The range of penalties under this formula is set with a
minimum of £500 and capped at a maximum of £5,000, with a default penalty
of £750 where the formula cannot be applied
6
Rateable values may be found at www.voa.gov.uk by entering the postcode into the search facility. Alternatively these may be
available from the department in the Local Authority that deals with business rates.
27. Section 3 Enforcement of the regulations 25
• For failure to display a DEC the penalty will be £500 and for a failure to be in
possession of an advisory report, £1,000
• For failure to have an air-conditioning inspection the penalty will be £300.
• For failure to produce a document to an authorised officer when required to do
so the penalty is £200.
The receipt of a penalty charge notice does not remove the need to comply with the duty
for breach of which it was given.
The enforcing authority may withdraw the notice if considers that it should not have been
given, and must withdraw it if the recipient can demonstrate that he or she:
• took all reasonable steps and exercised due diligence to avoid the breach; or
• has a defence set out in regulation 42.
The relevant person is not liable to a penalty charge for a breach of duty by failing to make
available an EPC or recommendation report to a potential purchaser if he or she has been
given a penalty charge notice under the HIPs legislation in respect of that same failure.
If a penalty charge notice is withdrawn, the enforcement authority must refund any charge
already paid.
3.4 Defences
Reg 42 of the Regulations establishes two defences where an EPC is not obtainable in time:
A person will not be liable to a penalty charge where they can show that they made a
request to an energy assessor to obtain an EPC at least 14 days before it was needed and
that despite all reasonable efforts and enquiries have been unable to obtain it. The request
for an EPC in these circumstances must have been addressed to an energy assessor likely to
be able to provide an EPC for the category of building in question, and accompanied by the
necessary payment or an undertaking to pay.
A landlord will also not be liable if a prospective rental tenant is seeking to rent the building
due to an emergency which required his urgent relocation, the landlord has no EPC
available, and there is insufficient time for the landlord reasonably to be expected to obtain
one before the building is rented out to that tenant. The landlord must nonetheless give an
EPC to the tenant as soon as is reasonably practicable.
28. 26 Improving the energy efficiency of our buildings – Local weights and measures guidance for Energy Certificates and air-conditioning inspections for buildings
3.5 Reviews
When the recipient of a penalty charge notice has asked the notice authority to review their
decision to issue it, the authority must withdraw the notice if it is not satisfied that:
• the recipient commited the breach of duty specified in the notice; or
• the notice was issued within time and contained the necessary particulars; or
• in the circumstances of case it was appropriate for the notice to be given to the
recipient.
3.6 Appeals
If a person who has been issued with a penalty notice is not satisfied with the review, they
may appeal to the County Court within 28 days after having the penalty charge confirmed.
If a penalty charge has been confirmed, an appeal can be made on one or more of the
following grounds:
• the recipient did not commit the breach of duty specified in the penalty charge
notice;
• the notice was not given within the period specified, or contain the necessary
particulars; or
• in the circumstances of the case it was inappropriate for the notice to be given to
the recipient.
Where an appeal is considered by the County Court, the court may either uphold the
penalty charge or quash it. Where it is quashed, the enforcement authority must refund
any charge already paid.
3.7 Offences relating to enforcement officers
A person who obstructs a trading standards officer who has required an EPC and
recommendation report, advisory report or air-conditioning inspection report for
inspection is guilty of an offence and liable upon conviction to a fine not exceeding level 5
(currently £5,000 maximum).
A person who is not an enforcement officer and purports to act as such is guilty of an
offence and liable upon conviction to a fine not exceeding level 5 (currently £5,000
maximum).
29. Section 3 Enforcement of the regulations 27
3.8 Enforcement Checklist
The following checklist is designed to help enforcement officers carry out their duties:
1. Is the relevant person claiming the property is exempt? If so, consider whether
this is correct, consulting relevant EPC, DEC and air-conditioning inspection
guidance and the Regulations.
2. If the relevant person is claiming that an EPC, DEC or air-conditioning report is
completely unobtainable, is this correct/does it seem reasonable?
3. Is the EPC authentic ie registered?
4. Has the relevant person unjustifiably failed to make available a copy of the EPC to
a potential buyer?
5. Has the relevant person without reasonable excuse taken longer than allowed
(seven days) to produce a document to the enforcement officer?
6. Is it more than six months since the relevant person ceased to be under a duty
(in which case the enforcement officer cannot require the production of the
document)?
7. Has the relevant person imposed any unreasonable conditions on the potential
buyer seeing the EPC or charged for providing a copy of the EPC?
8. Is action other than a Penalty Charge Notice a more appropriate exercise of
enforcement functions in the particular case eg a warning?
30. 28 Improving the energy efficiency of our buildings – Local weights and measures guidance for Energy Certificates and air-conditioning inspections for buildings
Section 4
The EPC Register
All energy certificates (EPCs and DECs) and associated recommendation reports or advisory
reports must be entered into a central register maintained on behalf of the Secretary of State.
There are two separate databases within the register, one for dwellings and the other for
non-dwellings.
4.1 Role of Accreditation Schemes
Energy assessors are required to be a member of an accreditation scheme approved by the
Secretary of State. The Government approves accreditation schemes to monitor the quality
of energy assessments by ensuring that energy assessors are competent and possess the
appropriate skills to conduct energy assessments.
The Secretary of State’s policy is to grant approval to accreditation schemes which meet
published statutory criteria. These standards define the outcomes that certification
schemes are expected to achieve.
4.2 Access to and disclosures from the Register
The Register is an archive of all EPCs and DECs and associated recommendation reports
and advisory reports produced by energy assessors. Documents and data held on the
register may only be disclosed by the register keeper to the extent that explicit provision for
such disclosure is made in the Regulations.
In order that register should provide an independent means for potential buyers or renters
(and those acting on their behalf) to check that certificates which are made available to
them are authentic, access to the register is allowed to any person who has the RRN – the
Report Reference Number, which can be found on the top right hand side of the certificate.
Any other person who is in possession of an EPC or a recommendation report may only
make disclosure of an EPC to the extent that explicit provision for such disclosure is made
in the regulations. Any other disclosure by such a person is an offence and punishable by a
fine not exceeding level 5 (currently £5,000).
31. Section 3 Enforcement of the regulations 29
4.3 Access to the register for enforcement authorities
The register keeper may disclose any document or data to an authorised officer of an
enforcement authority.
If you need to check the authenticity of an Energy Performance Certificate or verify that
the person who produced the assessment is properly qualified and accredited, go to www.
epcregister.com for domestic properties and www.ndepcregister.com for non-domestic
properties. Authorised officers are able to search for a report by the property’s address.
32. 30 Improving the energy efficiency of our buildings – Local weights and measures guidance for Energy Certificates and air-conditioning inspections for buildings
Glossary of terms
A building is defined as “a roofed construction having walls, for which energy is used
to condition the indoor climate; a building may refer to the building as a whole or parts
thereof that have been designed or altered to be used separately”.
For a building to fall within the requirement for an EPC it must:
• have a roof and walls; and
• use energy to condition the indoor climate.
Services that are considered to condition the indoor climate are the following fixed services:
heating, mechanical ventilation or air-conditioning. Although the provision of hot water
is a fixed building service, it does not condition the indoor environment and would not
therefore be a trigger for an EPC. The same argument applies to electric lighting.
A building can be either:
• the whole of a building; or
• part of a building, where the part is designed or altered to be used separately.
For a dwelling, ‘designed or altered to be used separately’ describes a unit that is self-
contained, meaning that it does not share essential facilities such as a bathroom/shower
room, wc or kitchen with any other unit, and that it has its own entrance, either from
outside or through common parts, that is not through another dwelling.
For a non-dwelling ‘designed or altered to be used separately’ is where the
accommodation is suitable for separate occupation. this could be indicated by the
accommodation having its own access, separate provision of heating and ventilation or
shared heating and ventilation but with the ability by the occupier to independently control
those services. The part could be deemed to be separate even if some facilities (ie kitchen
and toilet facilities) were shared. An example might be a unit in a shopping centre or a floor
in an office building. Twenty-four hour access to any common parts is not relevant to this
definition
A stand-alone building is a building that is free standing ie entirely detached.
33. Glossary of terms 31
The Total useful floor area is the total area of all enclosed spaces measured to the internal
face of the external walls, that is to say it is the gross floor area as measured in accordance
with the guidance issued to surveyors by the RICS. In this convention:
• the area of sloping surfaces such as staircases, galleries, raked auditoria, and
tiered terraces should be taken as their area on the plan; and
• areas that are not enclosed such as open floors, covered ways and balconies are
excluded.
Buildings that are industrial sites and workshops with low energy demand. These
include buildings, or parts of buildings designed to be used separately, whose purpose is to
accommodate industrial activities in spaces where the air is not conditioned. Activities that
would be covered include foundries, forging and other hot processes, chemical process,
food and drinks packaging, heavy engineering and storage and warehouses where, in each
case, the air in the space is not fully heated or cooled. Whilst not fully heated or cooled
these cases may have some local conditioning appliances such as plaque or air heaters or
air conditioners to serve people at work stations or refuges dispersed amongst and not
separated from the industrial activities.
Non-residential agricultural buildings with low energy demand include buildings,
or parts of buildings designed to be used separately, that are heated for a few days each
year to enable plants to germinate but are otherwise unheated.
A dwelling means a separate unit designed to provide living accommodation for a single
household.
A non-dwelling is a building that is not a dwelling.
If a building that is to be used for industrial or commercial purposes (eg a workshop
or an office) also contains living accommodation, it should be treated as a dwelling if the
industrial or commercial part could revert to domestic use, without significant alteration,
on change of ownership. This could be the case if:
a) there is direct access between the industrial or commercial space and the living
accommodation; and
b) both are contained within the same thermal envelope; and
c) the living accommodation occupies a substantial proportion of the total area of
the building (eg a small manager’s flat in a large non-domestic building would
not mean the whole should be treated as a dwelling).
34. 32 Improving the energy efficiency of our buildings – Local weights and measures guidance for Energy Certificates and air-conditioning inspections for buildings
Significant alterations are those alterations that are covered by the Building Regulations.
Rooms for residential purposes are not dwellings. A Room for residential purposes is
defined in the Building Regulations 2000 as a room, or a suite of rooms, that is not a
dwelling-house or a flat and that is used by one or more persons to live and sleep and
includes a room in a hostel, an hotel, a boarding house, a hall of residence or a residential
home, whether or not the room is separated from or arranged in a cluster group with other
rooms, but does not include a room in a hospital, or other similar establishment, used for
patient accommodation. For the purposes of this definition, a ‘cluster’ is a group of rooms
for residential purposes that is:
a) separated from the rest of the building in which it is situated by a door that is
designed to be locked; and
b) not designed to be occupied by a single household.
SBEM – Simplified Building Energy Model
SBEM is a computer program that provides an analysis of a building’s energy consumption.
The SBEM tool is designed to cover buildings that are not dwellings. It has been adopted
by government as part of the UK national methodology for calculation of the energy
performance of buildings. It is used also to demonstrate compliance for dwellings with
Part L of the Building Regulations 2000 (in England and Wales). For more information visit:
www.ncm.bre.co.uk/.
DSM – Dynamic Simulation Model
A Dynamic Simulation Model is a software tool that models energy inputs and outputs for
different types of building over time. In certain situations, SBEM may not be sophisticated
enough to provide an accurate assessment of a building’s energy efficiency. In these cases
government-approved proprietary dynamic simulation models may be used. Communities
and Local Government will provide such an approval.
SAP – Standard Assessment Procedure
SAP is the Government’s Standard Assessment Procedure for energy assessments of
dwellings. The current version of SAP, SAP 2005, has been adopted by government as part
of the England and Wales national methodology for calculation of the energy performance
of buildings. It is used to demonstrate compliance for dwellings with Part L of the Building
Regulations 2000 (in England and Wales). For further information visit:
www.projects.bre.co.uk/sap2005/
RdSAP is the new government-approved standard assessment procedure for energy
assessments of existing dwellings. A full SAP assessment requires many data items,
commonly derived from plans. RdSAP is an industry-agreed standard set of data items
with a standard set of assumptions, appropriate to the type of property being assessed. For
more information visit: www.nher.co.uk/pages/insight/rdsap.php or www.rdsap.info.
35. Appendix A Transitional arrangements 33
Appendix A
Transitional arrangements
The following transitional arrangements apply:
Any non-dwelling that was already on the market before the 6 April, 1 July, and 1 October
2008 commencement dates and remains on the market will not require an EPC to be made
available to prospective buyers and tenants until 4 January 2008. Once a contract is entered
into for the sale or the rent of the building, however, there is a duty for the prospective
seller or landlord to request an EPC from an energy assessor and make all reasonable efforts
to obtain the EPC as soon as reasonably practicable, and then give it to the person who has
bought or rented the building.
Before a dwelling can be marketed for sale, a HIP must be available. The temporary
exception, “first day marketing during a temporary period”, in regulation 34 of the HIP
Regulations, allows marketing to start without a HIP if an EPC or PEA cannot be obtained
in time despite all reasonable efforts, and to continue without it until such time as an EPC
or PEA can be obtained. In these cases, the duty to have a HIP arises when the responsible
person receives the EPC. The temporary exception ends on 31 December 2008.